A Few Thoughts on Being a Poet & a James Wright Poem
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Occasionally I'll be doing something
like washing my face and I'll think, "Why am I wasting my time writing
poetry?" or "Why is poetry so important to me?" They are really
both the same thought--though the first one is based on a negative view, and the
second is more positive.
I have these thoughts less often these days having been writing poetry and nonfiction seriously for the last fifteen yes, but occasionally (sometimes after reading something cheesy about poetry, sometimes while out in the world living my life) I do have this thought.
And when I have this thought, there is this thirty-second moment when I
feel I can walk away from poetry, from writing without regret and live a
completely different life. I would liken this to an addict, being completely
addicted to something and having it be so much of your life, yet every so often there are
these doors (perhaps, a moment of clarity, though I hate to use that term) that
come into our lives that open and we can walk away.
Each time, this moment
happens to me, I've chosen to continuing writing poetry and living the life I have.
But I wonder if one time, I will ever feel like I need to move on from poetry, if there will ever be a time I will choose to walk away.
I can't explain this feeling, my best comparison is one day when I was 25 years old on an
airplane coming home from London-- they served me a chicken dinner and I said to my
husband, "I'm not going to eat meat anymore" and handed him my meal.
For twelve years I didn't eat a single piece of meat or fish.
What happened
somewhere over the Atlantic that would just turn the meat-switch in my brain to
off? And twelve years later on Mardi Gras I said, "I think I'll start eating
meat again" and had some shrimp cocktail. And so became my current life as
a carnivore.
I don't think I'm necessarily wired differently from anyone else, but it
surprises me how at certain times, I make these large decisions, and once they
are made, I don't turn back, I just move forward.
Once I decided to quit my job, move from the city/suburban life I had spent all my life in to a small town of less than three-thousand people.
I think when these moments come up for me, I need to listen to that inner instinct, the one that has never been wrong. Lately, I've been feeling a little removed from that, but am trying to return to it, to return trust and faith back into my life. I know when I listen to the inner part of myself good things happen and life ends up taking to amazing places I can't even imagine.
But it's hard to trust. It's hard to believe what we are doing matters.
But it does. A wasted life is a beautiful thing.
_____
Lying In A Hammock At
William Duffy's Farm In Pine Island, Minnesota
James Wright
Over my head, I see the bronze butterfly,
Asleep on the black trunk,
blowing like a leaf in green shadow.
Down the ravine behind the empty house,
The cowbells follow one another
Into the distances of the afternoon.
To my right,
In a field of sunlight between two pines,
The droppings of last year's horses
Blaze up into golden stones.
I lean back, as the evening darkens and comes on.
A chicken hawk floats over, looking for home.
I have wasted my life.
~ Kells
~ Don't Miss a Post ~ Subscribe to Book of Kells by EmailKelli Russell Agodonwww.facebook.com/agodon
Published on March 20, 2013 08:47
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